Australian Green Development Forum is hosting a Townsville Solar Cities project update including coverage on issues regarding solar energy and climate change and how it effects our local industries in sustainable development. This will be a high profile event within the north Queensland community so don't miss out!

Hunter Lovins Australian Tour - Townsville visitThe American sociologist and lawyer, Hunter Lovins is dedicated to raising awareness of the benefits of sustainable development and “natural capitalism” to companies and business world wide. She is considered a pioneer in her field.

World Trends in Sustainability
a public talk given by Internationaly renowned Sustainability
expert and author Hunter Lovins see images soon

CLUSTERA number of things of the same kind growing or held together, a group of things or persons near together.

“Clusters bring government entities, companies, suppliers and local institutions together around a common agenda which is constructive and actionable”

Michael Porter
“The Competitive Advantage of Nations” 1998

NETWORK
A chain or system of interconnected or intercommunicating immaterial things, points or people. To link together for sharing of data and the efficient use of resources. To communicate or foster relationships with a network of people for personal advantage.

A CENTRE
An influential place or organisation, a place, area or group of people exerting influence over, within or somebody else – a centre of design innovation.

DESIGN
To create a detailed plan, to plan and make, to intend for use, to invent, to picture something’s form or structure, the way something is made, the process of designing, the intention, an underlying sense of purpose or planning.

Photo by Troppo Architects

The Purpose of the Document

This document is designed to develop an understanding of the key concepts for a Centre for Excellence in Tropical Design (CETD), Sustainability and Innovation.

It discusses the twin imperatives of building 21st century sustainable prosperity in a global economy and the increasing demands placed on all of us to live sustainably in our environments.

It explores the roles of knowledge industry clusters in the formation of globally competitive industries and outlines a vision for the development of a centre based on an understanding of these clusters.

It also describes the potential scope, roles and outcomes to which it and its members would aspire.

This document will assist interested parties to understand the concept of a Centre for Excellence in Tropical Design (CETD), the key principles underpinning its genesis and operation and a vision for the future for the twin cities and North Queensland.

Globalisation is driving a paradigm shift from a society based on the production and distribution of goods and services to a society based on the application of knowledge and learning in a global economy. At the same time our society is facing fundamental challenges in learning to live sustainably.

These challenges are:

securing sustainable and affordable sources of energy

resolving competition for natural resources

balancing development opportunities with biodiversity and the needs of the natural environment incorporating notions of landscape ecology

securing sustainable water resources

responding to changes in climate variability and extremes

building globally competitive 21st century businesses

providing for equity and social justice

Resolving and responding to the twin imperatives of sustainability and global competitiveness will involve fundamental changes to how we live, work, consume and how we organise our communities.
In this sense achieving sustainability in tropical environments dictates that cities, communities and individuals must learn how to:

touch more lightly on the environment and protect biodiversity

develop a shared understanding of practical sustainability for the tropics

apply tropical sustainable principles to the urban, rural and regional built environments

Competitive skills on a global scale have emerged in areas where there is a high concentration of clusters of knowledge and learning networks. These networks are formed through a range of formal and informal partnerships, relationships and collaborations that involve a dynamic mixture of government, business, community, industry, financial and learning organisations. Typically they focus on a range of activities, from finding practical solutions to problems, to pursuing innovative and creative approaches.

Global experience has shown that networks grow and flourish where there is:

a desire of individuals and organisations to tackle difficult contemporary challenges

a shared commitment to a preferable future vision

a clear, shared strategic intent

an open dialogue fostered by a focus on practical applications, demonstration projects, innovation and capability building.

However, the central success factor in growing such networks is a strong engagement with the community on practical issues of concern, healthy cross-sectorial networking and mutual respect.

These arrangements tend to focus on research, learning and a desire to commercialise applications which emerge from these collaborations. They are also pivotal in bringing people and organisations together motivated by issues of mutual concern. Because of their sheer density and concentration of learning, distinct capabilities and competencies flourish. This allows for the growth of globally competitive businesses.

It is envisaged in ten years that a ‘Centre for Excellence in Tropical Design’ is part of an exciting series of hubs of learning, innovation and business development on sustainable design and living in North Queensland.

The Centre is widely recognised as a key partner in fostering the networking that underpins the sustainable tropical design knowledge cluster. The cluster is now the backbone of a flourishing process of practical innovation and learning about sustainable tropical living. The Centre is seen globally as the pre-eminent source of information, learning and expertise on sustainable tropical design integrating sustainability through concepts of Ecology, Community and Place.

Key to the success of the Centre is its ability to provide a neutral environment for people to work collaboratively. It facilitates a growing awareness that living within tropical climates and landscapes has significant implications for the built environment and requires different and distinctive responses.

The Centre has championed North Queensland becoming an exporter of knowledge in tropical design and living to the Asia Pacific region. Today a range of businesses and employment opportunities in North Queensland are based on education, practical learning and design about sustainable construction and community building.

It has fulfilled the promise of its challenge for all of us to live and to touch lightly on our tropical environments. It has gone a long way to address many of the challenges of ensuring prosperity, whilst living sustainably in tropical environments and landscapes.

A range of organisations, businesses and individuals in North Queensland are responding to the challenge of living sustainably in tropical environments and have already developed a range of unique and distinctive innovations. These include:

Thuringowa Riverway Project

William McCormack Place, Cairns

Travel Smart

Townsville Water Management Projects - Supporting Creek to Coral

The Strand Foreshore Development – Townsville

Rasmussen and sustainable retrofitting of pubic housing

Hot Harry Domestic Solar Hot Water System

Sustainable Design Project of the Year for the Built Environment.

Significant advances have already been made through the application of local technical expertise, experience and knowledge. The concept of a functioning CETD offers the opportunity to significantly reinforce and enhance the innovations already commenced in North Queensland.

providing the milieu where sustainable design businesses and strategic partnerships can evolve and develop

To achieve its potential the Centre would have the following broad areas of interest:

Building regional approaches to sustainable communities

Working towards sustainable local communities

Healthy environments

Excellence in building and design

Our built heritage

Landscape Ecology & Biodiversity

Envisioning the future

Sustainable design for all

Click a thumbnail to enlarge

The Centre would be interested in assisting delivery of outcomes in all aspects of sustainability - economic, social, cultural, and environmental. It would have deliverables in broad areas such as:

Energy Efficiency

Natural ventilation

Principles of air conditioning

Solar control

Energy Systems

Embedded energy

Building Management

Distributed Renewable energy

Climate Response

Regional variation

Seasonal response

Cyclone design

Rainfall

Condensations

Humidity

Ventilation

Infrastructure

Transport

Waste Disposal

Water cycles & recycling

Community building

Disaster planning

Social planning

Community engagement & development

Youth

Social & cultural capital

Social marketing

Community economic development

Landcare/Coastcare

Quality & Safety

Health & safety

Quality control

Standards

Codes

Guidelines

Tropical Health

Vermin control

Public health

Multimedia & Communication

Creative design

Media

Design & promotion

Materials Selection

Manufacture

Renewable

Recycling

Green purchasing

Durability

Local sourcing

Design for remote locations

Design

Logistics

Indigenous communities

Town Planning & Urban Design

Land use

Public space

Accessibility

Lower energy usage

Cultural heritage

Research and Future Focused Education & Learning

Industry & Government

Community

Research Collaborations

Multi-disciplinary sustainability courses

Skills Development

Design Courses
(Architecture, Sustainability
& Social Planning)

Landscape Ecology & design

Biodiversity

Open space

Natural environments

In short, the Centre’s role and scope will position North Queensland globally as a hub of specialist skills and knowledge related to tropical design. Its clear intent is the growth of a network of companies and organisations that are involved in exporting a range of services in tropical design to the Asia Pacific area and to the broader tropics.

The central purpose of CETD would be to foster the growth of a network of hubs of excellence in tropical design. It would do this by building on existing organisations, networks and associations. It will provide linkages amongst and across organisations and individuals with a view to encouraging collaborations, partnerships and strategic alliances.

A list of significant players in sustainable development and potential network partners:

Building owners wishing to choose products and services to enhance their building/s suitability to its environment and operating efficiency

Businesses involved in the production of a wide range of products and materials

Town planning authorities seeking to share or access research findings/industry developments that assist in the development of appropriate guidelines for design and development in a tropical environment

Educational institutions aiming to support the economic, social and environmental sustainable development of the region

Local Government and State Agencies driving for optimum outcomes for the local community in tropical environments

Community members wishing to be engaged in the process of learning required to ensure the transition to sustainable tropical communities

Environmental businesses and community groups with a stake and a commitment to sustainable tropical living and protecting tropical landscapes

A Centre would be managed and supported by a committed collective of key identities drawn from State and Local Government, centres of learning, regional design discipline institutes, the local industry and the community. While no one group will have ownership over the centre, it would support the development of a synergised approach to increased sustainability by embracing diversity in its membership and supporting all sectors in the development of distinctive competencies for mutual benefit.

At its heart, the concept of a Centre requires a shift away from a silos and specialties mentality into holistic and innovative solutions. A shift from a world based on ‘more of the same’ to one based on continuous innovation and envisioning radical-novel approaches to the challenges ahead on the way toward sustainability.

How this is done is ultimately as important as the content to its ultimate success.

In essence, the vision for a CETD is building a societal-wide process of learning and adaptation. The fundamental challenge for sustainability is not only knowing what has to be done and how it can be done, but also having a community and society understanding, accepting and willing to change how they live.

Many people and organisations know there is a need to do things differently, but many are less sure what precisely needs to be done.

The challenge for this network is to work in partnership with community, industry, government, and academia to translate this generalised concern into practical strategies to live sustainably in a tropical environment.

The concept for a Centre has been initiated by a small group of people and organisations; underpinned by a desire to stimulate a more collaborative partnership between local governments, state government, universities, business and the community.

This Vision Statement for a Centre of Excellence in Tropical Design is a starting point for further discussion and elaboration. There is however a real commitment to continue the underlying partnership that developed this document and to foster its further evolution. As part of the concept, the original partners - City of Townsville, City of Thuringowa, Queensland Project Services and James Cook University Centre for Tropical Urban and Regional Planning - intend to explore project partnerships under the aegis of a Centre for Tropical Design.

Commencing as a “Virtual Centre” it is foreseen that the CETD will establish a more permanent form by 2006. It would serve as the focus for accessing the extensive range of expertise related to tropical design available throughout the Centre’s network of involved organisations.

The ultimate vision is to be able, in the next twenty years, to export practical models for tropical cities and sustainable patterns of living to a global community.

Develop & enhance the key foundation partnership between City of Townsville, City of Thuringowa, Department of Public Works and James Cook University Centre for Tropical Urban and Regional Planning, including the implementation of the following projects:

Workshops on practical projects to share learning on sustainability (e.g. City of Thuringowa Riverway Project; City of Townsville Total Water Cycle Management Program; Department of Public Works 5 Star Building)

Identifying knowledge gaps and working/networking with research and education institutions

Develop a Local Government Planning, Sustainability officers program

Investigating what type of entity would be most appropriate (i.e. alliance, affiliation, or less likely an organisation)

Developing base projects that support the idea of a network into the future

A Centre for Excellence in Tropical Design (CETD) Web site www.tropicaldesign.org